This is an archived copy of the 2010-2011 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.miracosta.edu

Accounting

Accounting offers theoretical and practical courses for students planning to transfer as accounting majors, career and technical courses that lead to certificates of proficiency and achievement, and professional development courses designed to improve workplace skills. Career options in accounting include positions in the private and public sectors, tax preparation, finance and banking, business ownership, and management.

Contact Information

Department Chair: Tom Severance

Dean: Al Taccone

www.miracosta.edu/ACCT

Department: Business

Office: Building 4800, 760.795.6841

Full-Time Faculty

Eric Carstensen
Michael Deschamps

Associate Degrees

Associate in Arts Degrees

Accounting; Bookkeeping

Students may earn one of the above-named associate degrees by completing a certificate of achievement and the general education courses required for MiraCosta College's Associate in Arts degree (see Associate Degrees). Students should meet with a MiraCosta counselor to identify required courses and to develop a written educational plan for the specific degree or certificate they wish to earn.

Certificates

Certificate of Achievement

Accounting

An accountant generally works without continuous supervision. He/she has full responsibility for entries to general journals, posting to general ledgers, year-end adjustments, and financial statements. An accountant often supervises one or more bookkeepers and is the primary accounting specialist in a small business. In addition to the training needed by a bookkeeper, an accountant needs extra accounting, business communication, law, income tax, and management training.

A strong demand by the community for accounting specialists provides opportunities within this field. The following courses may be taken in any sequence as long as all prerequisites are met.

Required courses: 
ACCT 101Practical Accounting4
ACCT 145Individual Income Tax4
ACCT 148Computer Accounting3
ACCT 158Business Mathematics3
ACCT 201Financial Accounting4
ACCT 202Managerial Accounting4
BUS 120Introduction to Business3
or BUS 130 Small Business Management
BUS 136Human Relations in Business3
or BUS 140 Legal Environment of Business
BUS 290Business Communication3
CSIT 110Computer Applications3
CSIT 128Microsoft Excel for Business3
Total Units37
 

Certificate of Achievement

Bookkeeping

A bookkeeper generally works under supervision. He/she makes entries in special journals, posts to subsidiary ledgers, and verifies and files source documents. Appropriate training includes accounting, business mathematics, and computer office skills.

A strong demand by the community for bookkeepers assures opportunities within this field. The following courses may be taken in any sequence as long as all prerequisites are met.

Required courses: 
ACCT 101Practical Accounting4
ACCT 148Computer Accounting3
ACCT 158Business Mathematics3
ACCT 201Financial Accounting4
CSIT 110Computer Applications3
CSIT 128Microsoft Excel for Business3
Total Units20
 

Certificate of Proficiency

Billing, Cost, and Accounting Assistant

This certificate introduces students to the basic components of billing, cost, and accounting functions. Most of the courses in this certificate can be applied to the Accounting and Bookkeeping Certificates of Achievement.

Required courses: 
ACCT 101Practical Accounting4
ACCT 158Business Mathematics3
One of the following:3
Computer Applications
Microsoft Excel for Business
Computer Basics I
   and Computer Basics II
Total Units10
 

Certificate of Proficiency

Income Tax Preparer

This certificate trains students to work in an entry-level assistant position with an experienced tax preparer or a commercial tax preparation service.

Required courses: 
ACCT 101Practical Accounting4
ACCT 145Individual Income Tax4
ACCT 148Computer Accounting3
or CSIT 110 Computer Applications
Total Units11
 
How to Read Course Descriptions

Courses

ACCT 101: Practical Accounting

Units: 4
Prerequisites: None
Acceptable for Credit: CSU
Lecture 4 hours. (0502.00)

Directed toward students preparing for ACCT 201 and the bookkeeping and accounting certificates, this course covers record keeping for sole proprietorships in service and trade businesses, including worksheets, adjusting and closing journal entries, payroll, cash reconciliation, and preparation of financial statements. Practical problems are stressed, and students are required to complete an accounting practice set for a company. (Formerly BUS 101.)

ACCT 145: Individual Income Tax

Units: 4
Prerequisites: None
Acceptable for Credit: CSU
Lecture 4 hours. (0502.10)

Tax planning and preparation topics include filing status, exemptions, income and exclusions, business expenses, itemized deductions, credits, capital gains, depreciation, tax payments, California tax, IRS and FTB, and audits. ACCT 145 is a CTEC-approved course which fulfills the 60-hour qualifying education requirement for tax preparers. (Formerly BUS 145.)

ACCT 148: Computer Accounting

Units: 3
Prerequisites: None
Advisory: ACCT 101.
Acceptable for Credit: CSU
Lecture 3 hours. (0502.00)

This course teaches students how to apply fundamental accounting concepts and principles and analyze business events using commercial business accounting software. Students enter accounting transactions, make adjustments and corrections, create and analyze financial reports, produce and compare financial statements, create a company file, calculate payroll, use advanced software features for loan and asset tracking, and make end-of-year adjustments.

ACCT 158: Business Mathematics

Units: 3
Prerequisites: None
Acceptable for Credit: CSU
Lecture 3 hours. (0502.00)

Designed to meet the needs of business students who wish to gain proficiency in mathematical applications in the business world. Preparation for the study of accounting. Preparation for pre-employment mathematics tests common to office employment. Applications include trade and cash discounts, markup, depreciation, property tax, interest, and payrolls. Focuses on solving word problems in an accounting and business context. Includes many accounting terms. (Formerly BUS 158.)

ACCT 201: Financial Accounting

Units: 4
Prerequisites: None
Advisory: ACCT 101.
Acceptable for Credit: CSU, UC
Lecture 4 hours. (0502.00)

Explores what financial accounting is, why it is important, and how it is used by investors and creditors to make decisions. Covers the accounting information system and the recording and reporting of business transactions with a focus on the accounting cycle, the application of generally accepted accounting principles, the classified financial statements, and statement analysis. Includes issues relating to asset, liability, and equity valuation, revenue and expense recognition, cash flow, internal controls and ethics. This is a transfer-level course for Business and Accounting majors and a requirement for the Accounting and Bookkeeping certificates.

ACCT 202: Managerial Accounting

Units: 4
Prerequisites: ACCT 201.
Acceptable for Credit: CSU, UC
Lecture 4 hours. (0502.00)

This course examines how managers use accounting information in decision-making, planning, directing operations, and controlling. It focuses on cost terms and concepts, cost behavior, cost structure, and cost-volume-profit analysis. Topics include profit planning, standard costs, operations and capital budgeting, cost control, and accounting for costs in manufacturing organizations.

ACCT 299: Cooperative Work Experience--Occupational

Units: 1-4
Prerequisites: None
Corequisite: Students must be employed in a position directly related to their declared major and must complete 75 hours of paid work or 60 hours of non-paid work per unit of credit.
Acceptable for Credit: CSU
(0502.00)

For students whose work is directly related to their major. To participate in occupational cooperative work experience education, students must be employed in a position directed related to their declared major and undertake new or expanded responsibilities at their work site. Students must develop one learning objective for each unit of credit in which they enroll and they must complete 76 hours of paid work or 60 hours of non-paid work per unit of credit. A maximum of four units of occupational work experience may be earned each semester. A combined maximum of 16 units of occupational and general work experience may be earned during community college attendance and applied as electives toward graduation. Students may receive G.I. Bill benefits for work experience only if required for their specific program. (May be repeated three times.)

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